TDK J CLEARFIELD REPUBLICAN," PDiuniD ar wabaaiiuTg at clkahfikld, pa. ITABLIIUEQ IN I ft t T i lie largeet Circulation of auy Ntwepapei In North Ceutral Peuuflylraula Terms of Subscription. if in advance, or within I monthi....? X H j.iid after 3 and bfor 4 monlha so If (.aid after the expiration of 6 m on the... a OO Rates oi Advertising, , Transient ailrcrtlaeinenti.per iqnareof lOllneaor lest, 3 limei urleea &q r nr enoh ubieqtient insertion 60 A tminir-tratora' and ttxaeutori'Dutleei I 60 Auditor' notice J 69 C iu'int and Eftreyi 50 Uj. dilution notice 00 ,ri,rriional Card!, & hnca or leai.l year..... I 00 L'irii notipfiB.por lino jq YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS. 1 i juare $9 00 I column $. 00 2 i.uarrt.a. 15 00 column.. 70 00 3 unr... 20 00 1 column.. 120 00 O. B. GOODI.ANDER, PublUher. au'jiers' Cards. W. SMITH, IT A T T O It N E Y - A T : 1:1:71 I'lcarllcld, Pi. LAW, J. LINGLE, AT f ORJJ EY - AT - LAW, iMilllpeburg, Outre Co., Pa. y:pd JOLAND B. SWOOVK, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Curw.n.Tille, Clearfield connty, Pa. oct. , '7S-t! 0 SCAI! MITCHELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEAKFIKLD, PA. trir-O&t in tba Opera Houae. etV, '7B-tf. u. Attokneys and Counselors at Law, clearfield, pa. January 80, 1870. plSAEL TEST, tTTORNEY AT LAW, CiearUeld, Pa. frtmtAto ana dour call of ribaw Houee. y.M. M. McCULLOUCill, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. "ttl.-e in Ma.onic building, Second street, op- 1.1, in. Liian niiuie. J ('. AUSOLD, LAW X COLLECTION OFFICE, I'l'HWtNSVILI.K, Utarfield CuunUT, PenQ'a. 7aa HIIOCKBAXK, ATXOHNKY AT LAW, CI.EAHFIELD, PA. s. rliir in Oppra llouia. MIT II V. WILSON ap J5.T7 1 8 rl.l AIIFIIiLD, . . PENN'A. rl(lice in th Matinia Dnildinfr, orer the I". i:nly National liank. uiar24 80. . It.MAM A. WAM AC. OATtD L. K RKaa. IIULKT r. WiU.v'l. JOHN W. WHIOJ.IT. H"ALLACiJ i KKEUH, 7 T Hu3oeaiora to Waliaco A Fialdlnr.) A T T O It NEYS-AT-LAW, j ,or77 ClurUeld, P. J. K. SXYDEU, ATTOUNEV AT LAW, CLKAKFIELD, PA. lu'e o,.r lite Cnunty National Uuik. June 2o, '7iitf. nu.. h. ki'iiHar. frat'B soanoa Ui:ilAY Si GOKDON, a T T O It N E Y S A T L A W, CLEARFIELD, PA. ff uflioe in Pie'a Opera lloure, fecond floor. .;i'74 ril.LlAM' A. n AGERTY, arTon.ricr-.iT.L.i ir, tll'l' ICK over T. A. Plcrk fc Co.. Hlore, CLEAKFIKLD, PKXN'A liT-H'lll attend to all log l bu.lneu with n.ui.toe. and fljehtj. lebt 1,'ltl-tf. KPa I. H BXALLT. DANIKL W. M'CURDT. & McCUKDY cENALLY ATTOHNEYS-AT-LAW, i icarnoid, ra. f-,erl bmlneai attended to promptly with . inlitr. Uffice on Seeond atreet, above tbe Firat Xativnal Bank. jan:lt76 I F. Mc KEN RICK, a DISTRICT ATTORNEY, ' . CLEARFIELD, PA. All les.il bTi.ine.B entruated to bit oar, will ra "ive prompt attenliou. .rrOtRre In the Court Houie. ui t, IMTH-ly. G. KXAMEIt, A T IOHXEY- A T - L A W , Real E.ute and Collation Agent, CI.KAnPIKl.il, PA., Will promptly attend tn all legal huiinaaB ai tro.te.1 to nia earn. rODioe in Pie'a Opera Hon.,. Janl'7i. OHN Ij. CUTTLK. ATTORNEY AT LAW. i Heal r.atal Agent, leardrld, Pa, 'Jint on Third n treat, bet. Cherry A H aJnat. r-yKeapaotrnily offera bla lervtoei la aelllng a'i'i buying landa to Clearfield and adjoining f -untloi , and with an experience ot orer twenty jr. an m a loTTeyor, flatten hlmaelf that be ean ritifler atiifaetton. Feb. Iflj3;tl, I'hpitians' Cards. D It E. M. SCIJEUREIt. IIOSilliOPATHIC PIIVHICIAN, Offine in retldeoe on Firat at. APiil 54, 1871. Clearteid, Pa. jyt W. A. MEANS, I'lIYSICIAN 4 SURGEON, DUBOIS CITY, PA. ill attend profeeilonal ealla promptly. augl0'70 I) I!. T. J. HOTKK. HYSIC1AN AND SB KO EON, Office on Market Street, Clearfield, Pa. :oa b .ura: I to 1 a. ra., and 1 to I p. m. I) It. J. KAY WRIGLEY, HOMO'.PATHIO PHY8IC1AX, TOlDoa adjoining tha re.idanea af Jamaa "Kl'T, K.y, u Seeond St., Clearteid, Pa. July.tl,'J8 it. (I C. JKNKINS, M. I)., J a I' II V SI CI A N A N D S V Ii G E ON, CtiKWE.NHVILLE, PA., Office, at re.idenee, corner nf State end Piae "rtMi. Jan. iib, Is81-tf. I) It. U. II. VAN VALZAH, C'I.EARPIEM), PI'.NJI A. HFUCE is llE-MDRNcE, CORNKH OF FIRST AND PINE BtKKKTS. r- Oftoa hoar- From It la I P. M. May II, H7I. JJ'S. J. P. LURCH FIELD, l..ta Snrgaoa of tha S.td Kaglm.nl, reanaylTanla Volaate,ra, havlag r.tarn.d fr.aa lb. Army, "tan hit profaaalanal larTlaaa la Ua.ltla.aa elUlaarl.raaoaaty. dM'refe.ateaal ealla prompUy attoaded aa. Y ea aB lUaat, loraaailyaoaaplad by Or W4i (arr,'M U CLEAR GEO. B. GOODLANDEE, Editor VOL. 55-WHOLE NO. Cards. I Oil PKINTIKC3 Or KVKKT DESCRIP f J tiftn naatlv eiMutd at thla oftla. TITKTICI W. have US' CONHTABLBH' KKK8 ? prtntad a Ursa number of tba Da FK bill, ano will oa Ibe receipt of twenty are oenta. mall a noitr to any addreae. mats LI.IAM M. 1IKNHY. Justice if TUB PCACB ARDbCRlTKRIlt, LUMIlKH CITY. CoIImDoui made and money promptly paid over. Article! of agreement mail deede ( fronreyance neatly eteouted end warranted Mr rot or oo charge. HJj'l'- JOHN D. THOMPSON, Juitioe of tba Peaoe and Scrivener, Curmenivtlle, Pa. fe4L.Coll9flt.oai mad and paid ovar. oneT promptly falJ3'7Uf HENRY liEETU, (U8Tl.au P. O.) JUSTICE OF THE PEACE ron iell Toirgsnir. Ma; 8, M7S.1)' JAMES MITCHELL, nsAiBit m Square Timber k Timber LantlH, jl I'Tl CLEAKPIia.O, PA. V. UOYT, Land Surveyor and Civil Enginee PHII.irSBTRO, PA. AU liu.inraa will be atte&de ' to promptly. Ilee. IS, 1NS0 ly. REUBEN HACKMAN, House and Sign Painter and Paper -Hanger, Clearfield, Peun'a fvWill axaouto joba in bla line prnmptly and In a workmanlike manner. aprt,67 I7R.VN K FIKLDING X AND WILLIAM O. HKiLLR, 1TTOIl.rK1'K-.1T-Lt , CLKAIIFIKLD, PA. Not. lTth, I5H0 If. JOHN A. STADLKH, BAKER, Market St., Clearteid, Pa. Freib Bread, Itu.k, Holls, Piea and Cabaa on hand or made to order. A general aaaortment of t'ontectionariea, Pruiie and Nuta tn atook. 1c, Cream and Oy.tera tn aeaion. b'alovn nearly oppoiito tba Poatofne,. Prleea moderate. Mareh la-'7. WEAVER. 4, BETTS, DKALKR R Real Estate, Square Timber, Saw Legs, AND H'MiiKR OP ALL KINDS. O"-0fflie on Second itreet, in rear of itora riMin of (ieorge Weaver A Co. f JftnU. '78 tf. RICHARD HUGHES, JVHTTCR OF THE PEACE TOR Otcalur Totrnshtp, Oaeaola Mill. P. O. All offlelal bnalnaM antraated to aim will b. promptly attended to. aaob29, '71. I AKRY SNYDER, BARBER AND HAIRDHEcoF.H. Mhop on Market St., oppoalta Court Iltma.. A elean towel for every ouatumer. Alio dealer in lleet Brands or Tobarco anil C'lgara. fllaarBald. Pa. ma? IB, 'Ta. JAMES H. TURNER, Jt'RTICE OP TUB PKACE, H allaceton, Pa. -eTHe haa prepared bimaelf with all the neceat-ary blank forma under tba I'enilim and Iloonty law a, aa well aa blank Deeda, etc. All legal mattera entrtlfted to hia care will receive prompt attention. May Ttb, lB7itf. ANDREW JIAUWICK, Market mreet, Clearlleld, I'a., h AxrrArTDRaa aid niiLta ia Harness, Bridlct, &ttlJUs, Collars, and Horse-Furnishing Goods. AII klnda of repairing promptly attended U. iSaddlere' Hardware, )lore llruabea, Carry Cumba, Ac., alwaya on hand and for aale at the toweat oaah price. March IV, l(t7V. G. H. HALL, I PKACT1CAL TUMP MAKER, NEAR CLKAfFIKLD, PENN'A. Pumpe always on band and made to order en abort notice. Pipe bored on reasonable term a. All work warranted to render attraction, and delivered if deilred. my3b:lypd SHOI:MAKIKt;-I hereby Inform my pa troot, and mankind In general, that 1 have removed my ihoemaking hop to the room la Ureharn a row, orer 8. 1. Snyder'a Jewelry itore, and that I am prepared to du all kinda of work in Bit line eltaaner than any other anon In Iowa All work warranted ai good aa can be done any where ele. Puailtvely thia li the chiat,f Pt ahop id nearue.'i. .iwn. ji. ve,i,niHi, lee. II, I-.T8 tf. Lilvery Ntabl?. rlH K nnderiigned bega leave to Inform thepuV ,1, lie that he ia bow lully prepare to aoommo date ell to the way of furniablng IK.aea, Buggioa, Dawuiva inu iiNrnean, bb nm anonesi notice and en raaaonable terma. Kelt dene oa Loenat atreet, VUlHatan alli-U MBH aosriB. OKO. W. UEARIIART. Tlaarfietd, Feb. 4, 174. THOMAS H. FORCEE, DBibU ! OKNERAL MEHCHANDI8E, f.RAHAMTOIV, Pa. Alio, extenilvt tnanofaeturer and dealer In flq Timber and Hawed Lumber of all kinda. .Orderi lollclted and all hill promptly I. SNYDER, PRACTICAL WATCUMAKER ARB RRALRS IR Watches, Clocks and Jowelry, ertkmm't Jtae, UwrtM AreM, I.RAHPIF:l.l), pa. All kiridi of repairing In i ended to. ly line promptly at Jan. lit, 187 V. t lcitrflrld Itmuranre 4fenrf, JiMII BBBB. CABBOtL L. BtDPI B. tit: tin ir ittnin.i:, irrntt Repreaenttbe following ael other Inl-olaai Co'l Com pan lea, Afeta. Llrerpnol London A 0 lobe IT. ft. Br.-4,Jtrl,Pi Lvooming on matsal A eaab plane. ,.M ,0rt,00tl I'bwniB, of Hartford, Cons S,fi24.DM Inearanre Co. of North Amerira B,4:.J.,T4 North Hrltlnh A Mereaatile-U. 8. Ur.. Kpotif'B Cummereial U. 0. Braarh...- 7,H4 Haterlown T4,l Traveler! (Life A A v 1. 1 eat 1 4,m,4b4 0fl.ee on Market 8t., of-p. Vmri 11 nut, Clear field. Pafc Jan 4, 'IMf. West End Drug Store, lit ORAIIAM'S ROW, (Ualf aay bolwn Monoa'a and Flaek'a tor,a.) CLRAHFIKLD, PA. THE anderalgnrd baa opened ap a Drug fltora, with a full eapply of parfwtly pur. and Ireak Draga, Medh-taaa, CbemiMl. and Toilet ArtieUe. Thea. Drag, bara aweat MlMtad wltb graal ear. and are guaranteed ta a pwfeetly para and nliabl.. 1 will gle. my perannal alt.a Uea aa laaa aWaaHwaoat, aad will abearfall, glee aay advtewaai laavraaatiaat ta regard aama'tietaal fraa af akarga. DhY I. i. Hut HE. ChMrlald, Pa, Dea. I, Haa tf. 3. Si Proprietor, 2,709. ASLEEP. In Rummcr-tima how fair It ihowed My (jardfn by tha tillt road, M'hora fiery itnlkt nf b lot ir tui glowed, And roivi loftiy blnfbrd t With atura iiirti. and Rarlanla white. Pal bcllotrojia, the pud'i delight, And odora thut perfumed the night Wbare ilia South wind ruibtd. Tberr lottmn purple piniiti itood, Uay ttilipn rrd wtrh floral blood, And wild laiingt freab fram field and wood, A lit with dainty Rrao. I)tri heavrn-btue belli oroolambina, Thn dnrkly-myotfo paiilon-vine, And elrmafiit, that lovae to twioa, Urdcoked that bnpjij plaoa. Ptoralh that itrong an clouded blaie Or long and fervaut Hummer dayi Tbrlr colon auiota tba pauing gana, And denied every aye. Their eua of neented huoey-dew Charmed all tha boea lhat o'er tbeia flaw, And butUifliee ofradlent hue laurrd ai thej fluatcd by. Now tl!i a erond of ralltnK anow. The bitter winda uf Winter blow, No bl(notn darea Iti cup to ahow Karth lolda them in her brnaat; A ihr ml of white, a virgin pall, la i lowly, softly, biding all; In vain (hall any tweet wind flail To break their illent reit. My gar dm ia a vaninbod dream, bead in the waning mooo'i cold beam, Clear icicle above it glenm; And yet I know nut how My flowuri will bear tba dropping rain When SjiriDjt rencwetb bill and plain, And tbeo it Khali be mine again ; It ii Uod'i vanlen now. Hot Ttrtj L'ifoke, in tlttrptr' JJayatini or ftbruary, THOMAS CARLYLE. THE SAGE OF CHELSEA DEAD AT THEHIPE AGE OK EIGHTH SIX YEARS. HIS LIFE, WORKSAND INFLUENCE. T1IK CAKKEK Of A rilll,08(lMUtt WHO rtAVES A DEEP IUPKKHSION ON tlOl'EHN THOVOIIT. Lanoa.tor latrlligonaer. 'J liumns Cttilylo was a contributor to tbo Lontlun MtiijiKine as long ago as 18l.'l. Ilo was born ut Ecclefechan. I'uinlriesliiro, Scotland, on the 4th of Decern her, 7Uj, and died February Mb, 1881. Hu was a fellow-student with Edward Irving, who was three years older than himcU,ut Edinburgh. When 18 years old ho became an 09 Bistunt teacher ut Kirkcaldy, whero, ho used to say, ho and Irving "strove by virtuo of birch and book to initiate the urchins into whnt is called tho rudiments of learning." Although des lined by his parents for tho ministry, and studying for a timo with lhat do sign, he umnd that rending and study hud led him aw ay from tho faith of bis fathers, and he ubunilonctl tho notion ot becoming u preacher. Ilo was an anient student always, und while set mg as tutor in a private family mado bimxclf muster of the (lerninn Iuol'iiiil'O und literature Ilo wroto an "Essay on Proportion," which was prefixed to a translation of Legendre's geometry. His "Life of Schiller" was published in tho London Magazine. Ho translated tiootho's "Wilhelm Meistcr" in 1824, "Specimens of German Komanoe" in 1827, and furnished many biographies trom time to timo to tho Edinburgh Cyclopedia. II is miscellanies wcro col lected by lialph Waldo tmerpon, and published in this country in 1815. In 1831 Curlyle took with him to London Ins book "Surtor liesartus," and vainly endeavored to soil it. lie at length got it published in Fra:er't Magazine, but it was not until years uflerword that it wasful y appreciated Carlylc's work, "Tho French ftevolu lion," was published in 1837, and bo camo noted for its novel method of presenting history. His essay on "Characteristics" was issued in 1831. Ho published a work on "Chartism" in 183!), on "Hero Worship" in lKIO.and "I'ast nnd Present" in 1843. Mr. Carlylc's complete works com prise nearly forty volumes. Ho wroto voluminously for tho Edinburgh Review and tho Foreign Quarterly. II is "Count CughoBtro" and "Diamond Necklace" were notable, no published "Letters wid Speeches ol Oliver Cromwell" in 1845. st'rk'H of "Lattur lflj 1 n. , phlels" in 1K.VI, a "Life of John Hter ling" in 1851, and a "History ol Fred erick tho Great," tho last volume of which was published in I8G4. II is in augural address in 1800, when be wsb elected in his 65th vear to tho I'rosi dency to his beloved Kdinbiin'li Univer sity, was reprinted almost all over tho world. Carlylo was married in 182C to Jane Welch, ol Craigcnptittoch, where she owned a small estate, on which ho lived lor a time. Thcro for six years, among granite hills and black niorass i'B, filtoeii miles from a town, ho read and wrote in peace. His wile claimttl to bea lineal descendant!,! John Kno Ho lived many happy years with her ana lo the last ot his I ilo never ceasod his frequent pilgrimages to hor gravo. . CHAS. A. DANA 8 EI LOOY. Mew York Sun. What Carlylo would have been hud his life been Contemporary with that storm ana stress period ot which ho made himself tho eulogist, wo cau guess by recalling what ltichter was. Thoro was, indued, a surprising like ness in tho gifts, acquirements, ethical convictions, and artistic methods of tho two men, and an equally curious coincidence was disclosed in their fort unes and careers, lioth were tho sons of poor men, and both won for them solves, at the eost of not a liltlo harsh toil and privation, a University educa tion, lioth wcro omnivorous rather than sympathetic renders, and of both it might be said that, to tho lust, they nau never iusmoncd lor tnemsolves a d('flititc,coheront system of philosophy. Moth were constrained, lor a Ion 12 time. to clto out a subsistence by the trade of schoolmaster, and both gained but a tartly recognition trom publishers or readers, owinu to their intensely cm plinsned and grotcsquo originulily lioth wroto prose, but both Were noots n mo loitiest and deepest meaning ol tho word. So lar as ouch boro a mes sage to his lino ho spoko as a bard rather than a philosopher, as a prophet ana not as a luwuiver. J'.ach ex bib ted a contempt of conventional forms and accepted ranting ot art which had never been pnralelled In literaturosave by licbelliaa, and each combined with a boundless humor not unworthy of me creator 01 "iiarguntua an cxquisi live sensitiveness to sorrow, and a heart piercing pnlhos of which their jovial J- ronch lororunnor had exhibited no sign. 1 hat ( arlylo was a student and disciplo of Jean Paul, that be strove to supplement and develop a pirunai ainiuty by conscious assimila tion, is sulllcicnily obvious to the most casual reader. That there was, however, no question hero o! aorvilo mitalion, but lhat the younger man's istion to Iticbler suggests rather the ntcrcnmmnnications ot equal souls, is plain from the free play which Carlylo gave to his own temperament, and from his fundamentally distinct atti tude and point of riew. The German was by natnre a genial and gleesnme as the Scotchman was grim and ialnr- FIELD CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1881. nine ; tboro was Bomolliing Rportful in tlio biennis ot tho former's irony com parctj with tlio excoriuting strokes of tlio Barosttm. Thoro was somothing joyous, saiifrnino, hopeful, in liu litcr'a glunce, as well boctmo ono who had witnosHod tho upheaval of his nation undor Htcin and llurdot.buri;, and watched tho unfolding of that Iliad whoso climax eamo at Loinsic. Rich- tor's last years, like. Csrlylo's, wore cuattoroa ana tioutloa by physical do say, and tho author of "Tital" can scarcely bo said to have behold the pitiful oxtinction of the dream which bad promised a fioo Germany. It would havo been impossible fori L any le, bad ho boon nuttiraHy less sombro and splenetic, to havo turned a choerful and complacent oyo on the England for which ho began to write. When, about 18,11, "Manor liesartus" was conttibtitod to Frazn't Magazine, thoenmbativo period which culminutcd at Waterloo bad long been over, and tho industrial period was in tho full tide of covotous, accumulative energy. 1 he reaction against the strain and outpour, tho tremendous sacrifices and dear bought glories ot tho Nttpoleonto era, had then in fact reached its height. It was OHsentiullv a reruneruFivo in. tcrval, during which exhausted En gland took account ot stock, but, by comparison, it looked to tho irutul vision ol tbo scotch enthusiast not only a prosaic, but a shabby, sordid, impo tent and despicable ago. With the aims, sentiments, standards, and arbi tors of such a time Carlylo had not trace of sympathy. He lilted up his voice In outcry and reared bis arm against them all ; ho made it tho busi ness ot his lilo to thwack thofulminato against the philosophy of Bentham and wont no aecmea its ignominious out come in society and legislation. On the other hand be strove to probo tho boart and tiro the blood by an clo quonce that often lacked but the form to rival the master works of epio lofti ness and lyric power, and eloquence that seemed to rango through tbe wholo gamut of emotion, now quiver ing with tragic grief, now soaring lo dim heights of solemn aspiration, and now rioting in grim yot contagious raillery. Jtor should we forget tbnt the ideals which may now seem errali and one-sided, but which Carlylo novcr wearied ol upholding and onlorcing by all the means in bis largo grasp by history, biography, critical essay, and political pamphlet wero admirably atlaplod to control and discredit the tendencies ol his day. It was as we bavo said, an ago whon men looked rather to utility than to ideal porfeo t.on, when they thought moro of craft than lorco, when they cared less lor powor tban money, wben tho pool did not Scan loo narrowly the instru ments of wealth, and when tho rich wero apt to account thoir work finish cd, and to watch the tragio comedy of 1 1 to with listless unconcern .Neither was the epoch of tho Chartists and the corn law agitation the. only modorn period marked by commonplaco and ignouio Icatures. in tho world abou us wo may rocognizo not a low of tbe same traits ; and while this remains true, tho teachings of Thomas Carlylo. which smote the ears ot his own aire like a clarion, will lose littlo of ihui portinonco and powor. ANOTHER NonLl TllinLTE. Philadelphia Tim... 1 Ho toiled ior a ions time as Milton tolled, aa liucon toiled, as Locke toiled. guided only by his own overmastering instinct 01 me cod given mission tec u 11 dating bis thought, upholding his faint ing courage. He was during tho first nity years ot his life tbo epitomo and consummalo realization ot his own definition ot eonius. Tho power to work, to givo attention to details, to bo as accurate in tho color ol a man comploiion, in art, as in tracing the nereauy mat Shaped his traits, ills pictures of men como before the reader as cleaily cut, as minutely lashioned in outline, as a portrait of Titian or alaanuer,. His Marttbeau, Cromwell, Frederick, Lalayctte, Luther, Hums and Hobespierre will coexist with tbo language 111 which they are written lruth ana that instilled, lias his m slon, but truth lo him was a beacon of constantly changing lights. None but tho Blrong food fully in its white glare. but onco under Its ellulgont luminous ness no detects sppoared to tho blind od eyes of tho worshiper. In other words, force, the strong man, moving on a ueroic piano, wita trampled ono pies and overturned systems as the mighty liamowork ol their action. He began, tbe apostle of progress in tno widest senso, the ally ol reform the evangel of humanity. He ended tho advocate endowed beyond any other thinker of his limo, the Abdiel of reaction, tbo panegyrist of blood and Iron, the bondsman of force. Ho becan his leacbinirs with ner haps tho clearest insight into tho his tory ol tho past ot any man who haB written since St. Paul. Ho was near the woes of the race as he sot out, but any oy aay battling bosts arose and they seemed not only to dim his vision but chill the ardor of his soul for tho things that had at first fired his pen The conquest of monies bv trreat bo. came his ideal of force in action. The revolt of peoples against warriors and systoms of tyrany bocamo to bim'the utinile babblement" ol lools. The tremendous outburst ot the French Revolution at first fascinated him, but the very intensity of what liucon calls tho "dry light" of history, which his own band bad lit, brought out only the most baleful actors tor tho contem plation and admiration ol mankind. It would be difficult to act bounds to the majesty ot bis intellectual march in dealinc with the occult in historr It would bo not less difficult to point nut the ruul tendonry, contrasting his earner wnn bis later aims, 11 is ilu- work, like that of a groat tumultuous river, cannot be told while the anirry swirling billows of iti force are still ing on, deafening as well as dag gling ihe beholder. The noblest max mi ot lite, the most austere rode ol morals, Iho most inspiring incentives lo action, may be found in every chap ter he has written. These are brought into tbe most Incongruous opposition, to tbe most motirnlul prostration be fore tho voiled gods of absolutism, mysticism and king craft. The wbolo lilo thought of bis Inter years was de voted to the teaching that the people, like the children of Israel, had sinned from their very nature and that it was the will of God that a king that is, a force should be set In perpetuity over them. He went much further than the prophet who gave Israel a king as punishment; he set the king op as the be all and end all ss the sign and to ken of a woll ordered system. Yet even in those teachings he was as grandly inconsistent a ho was grand ly bold in taming bark the mighty current of his own first overwhelming maelstrom ot thought. Indeed, a maelstrom Ii the one object in nature bat the man Tost life-work may be likened to. It bat no boginning and r t PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. no end; tho truths that are held on tbo topmost crest of its swik-rusbing current at ono moment sink snbmcrg cd tho next under lh creslcd break ers of paradox, contradiction and do. nial, only to ro cmorgo again on o broader circle and in calmor sweeps, clnrih'cd by temporary Bubmersion, Tho ovil that tho ordinary man may do lives after him and tho good is apt ,u i,u uiivrri'u wuu u,n uuiiub. 11 will not bo so with Ctulylo; his evil will Borvn to throw into more imposing outlines the good, which shall live as long alter him as liurnttn, speech is the medium of thought--as long as tho teachings ol 1 Into or Aristotle and with a hundred fold tbeir force. CARLYLE'S INDUSTRY. TFI K ACCIDENT TO T($5 FRENCH REVO LCTION. ' In 1837 Carlylo published "Tho French devolution ; a History." Its publication was deluycd by tho acci dental burning of tbo first volume just as it was ready lor tbe printers. Cor lyle had lent tho manuscript of tlio first volume to John Stuart Mill, who carried it to Mrs. Taylor, tlio lady, whom ho afterwards married. Jiy somo strango accident it was left ox posed, and a stupid servant lighted the tires wuu it. ben the author heard of Ibis misfortune, ho was like a man beside himself, as there was scarcely a page of tho manuscript left. Sittinir down at tho table, bo strovo 10 soiled his thoughts, and began to rewrite, but only to run his pou through each puge us it was finished. Doggedly porsevering, bowovor, Carlylo, finish ed tho volnino at last, after five months' labor. Curlyle had, however, no roproachos for tho friend who had caused him tho trouble. Hut he describes the work of rewriting that volume as ono prolong ed agony. Ho undertook the task at once, but failed through severe mental depression. Uu then devoted sevci-al weeks to novel reading as a relaxation and so finally succeeded in reproduc ing the book. A friend ot Curlyle, in an article upon tho burning ot the vol ume, says : "After tivo months of persovereneo he ruwroto it, having calmed himself sufficiently by reading all tho novels 01 Litptain Jlurryatt. this second production he pronounced afterwards as belter than the first. J lis own ac count of his feelings at tlio ti no is both humorous and sad. ' There was scarco ly a page of manuscript left,' bo says. 'I Bat down ut tho table and strovo 10 collect my thoughts and to commence my work again. 1 filled pago titer page, but ran tho pen through every lino as tho pago was finished. Thus was it for many a weary day until, at length, as I sal by the window, half hearted and dejected, my eye wander eu along over acres 01 rools, 1 saw a man standing upon a scaffold engaged in building a wall tlio wall of a house. Hb a trowel bo d luy a great splash of mor'sr apon the loot layer, and then brick alter brick wonld be deposited on this, sinking each with tho butt 01 bis trowel, as H to give it his bono diction and farewell ; and all tho while singing or whistling as blitho as a lark. And in my spleen 1 said to myself, "Poor fool I How canst thou bo so merry under such a bile-spottod atmos phoro us this, and everything rushing into the rogions ot tbo insane I anil then 1 bethought mo, and I said lo myself, "Poor fool thou, rather, that sittest hero by tlio window whining and complaining. ' the result was that he began to pick up courage : ho road light literature lo induce a proper vacuity of mind, and in course of limo things came out all right. An Adventcbb on tiii Plains. The Grouloy (Col ) Eye says : A cor respondent writing from down tho Platte relates this: "A few ovcninirs ago a lumily boro were startled by the sudden opeuini; ol their door and tho rushing in of a man barefoot ed and covored with ice, oxclulm- ing: 'Uli, God, 1 am frozen I Apolo gizing for his abrupt intrusion, ho mado tbo following explanation : He had como from Sidney by the mail back tho week before, but could not get his buggago across tlio river. V anting a change of clothes, ho pro cured a team and set out to get them ; arovo 10 tho river bank and proeoeded across 011 loot. Un bis return, it bav. g become dark, he fell through tho ice and got woll soaked. After getting asnore.iiiinmngitadviMi to change, be pulled off his boots, but his nether garments rolused to "como : they wero frozen lo him. In the meantime his boots rfsd frozen so hard that ho could not replace Ihem. Hu was in a bad fix, a milo f rom any house, barefooted and tbo morcury away below zero. Jumping Into his wagon he drovo to Ihe nearest lights, arrivini; there badly scorod and almost frozen to death." Abolition of Millstones. I found all tho Minneapolis millers taking out their millstones and substituting steel rollers in thoir places. Wheat, by tho now llungariun process, is not ground but cracked. These rollers aro about thirty inches in diameter. It takes llvo sets of steel rollers to finish tho our. Each sot of rollers run closer than tho preceding. After tho wheat passes each set of rollers it is bolted or silted through coarso cloth. This cloth ets tho disintegrated particles ol wheut through, and pusses oft tho bulky and largo pieces, which aro run through another and a closer set of rollers, and cracked again. Tho last rollers have Htlo elsu but wheat bulls and tho waxy germs of tho wheat, which do no crack up nui math down liko a piece of wax. Ihe germ of a kernel ol wheat is not good food. It makes flour black, liy tho old millstono pro- cess tins waxy germ was ground up HU tbe starchy portion and bolted through with flour. 11 y tho new sys tem of cracking tho kernel instead ol grinding it, this germ is not ground, hot flattened nut, and sifted or bolted out whilo starchy portions ol tho wheat aro crushed Into powdered wheut or flour. Those "Ill.lT.ZAnns." Tho Detroit Free Prens says : Tho derivation of tho word "blizzard "is not gonorally II now n. Wo will elucidate : Whon ono of those suporior creatures who inhabit Boston enters his (esthetic homo on a cold night bo removes big cultured mulller mm his refined throat and remarks: The atmospheric oxuboranco is anlsg onistic to tho preservation ol caloric in the physiological structure," which, ranslalod, means, "it blows hard." Whon a degenerate Chicago man re turns homo at 3 A. M. from a chicken fight, after having observed the full of Ibe niurrtiry and several other things D liquid form, he explains the state of the atmosphere to tho angry partner of his joys as follows : "M'dearsh, bl'sb'ard bl'tiarrt," alter which he onoounteiM a bhziard from bit indig nant spouse. REPUBLICAN. TUB ATTORNEY GENERAL. HIS ANNUAL REPORT PRESENTED TO THE LEO1SLAT0RI EXTRACTS FROM AN INTERESTING DOCUMENT THE REVISION Ob1 THE TAX LAWS DISCUSSED ANDAREMEDT PROPOSED. Tbo annual report of Attorney Gen eral Palmer has been presented to the Legislature in pamphlet tor in. The report embraces seven pages ot printed matter. The following interesting ex tracts are mado from it. Tbe report opens : Gentlemen In compliance with tho act ot April 21, 1857, relating to the otneo ana amies 01 Attorney Gen eral, 1 havo tho honor to submit the lollowing report of the official business transacted by mo during the two years cnaing uocciuDer dl, 18811. the number ol claims placed in my bands for collection during tho years 1879 and 1880, was two hundred and twenty six, thirteen ot which wero sub sequently withdrawn by tho Auditor General. Tbo claims amounted to 2G1,631.74, and. of that sum I havo collected and paid into the State Treas ury 8133,78'J.Ol, leaving a balance still duo upon the same of 127,851.73, to onlorco the payment of which the nee essary legal proceedings have been in stunted. In addition to tho amount collected upon claims certified to me in 1879 and ISwfypaymonts wore mado upon claims ol former years, tho total collections amounting to HVOJuo.bt. A brief account of tho actions brought by tho Stale against the bogus Medical Colleges ol Philadelphia is then given. 1 n concluding Ibis su bjoct the Attorney General Bays : Proceedings have also boen com menced against persons claiming to oxorciso tho franchises of a corpora tion Known as "1 ho Philadelphia Uni versity of Mcdicino and Surgory." Their names aro William .1. P. Ingra bam, William Harmon, E. ilelzgar, William Major, John Kayo, William H.Orvis,T. Emerson Dennett, William Ilargraves and Thomas B. Miller. They also claim to own tho charters of several other Colleges cbartored by the Suite, which, 1 beliovo, either con- uiiu inn power 01 revocation, or wero granted after tho Constitutional i Amendment of 157, and may, there fore, fbo revoked by tho Legislature, if found injurious to the public, and to which your attontion is expressly invited. By methods ol deluy, known to tho law, this case has boen unavoidably prolonged, and no tinul judgment has been reached. 1 have no reason to donht that the ulti mate conclusion will J10 in harmony with tho interest! ol tho Stato, and if so, tbe fruitful, long continued, but dis graceful business of selling academic degrees and turning looso hordes ot ignorant villains with licenses to proo tico medicine, apparently rogufarly granted by incorporated institutions of1 learning ot this Uommonweallb, will have been destroyed, to the great gam of our good namo, both at homo and abroad, Tho report states further that as there bad been no provision made by tho Legislature lor the expenses of theso prosecutions, Mr. W. M.Singorly, of, Philadelphia, voluntarily advanced the necessary funds. An appropria tion is recommended for Air. Singerly'e reimbursement. The sorvices in the cases of 8. H. G Wendell, esq., of tbe Philadelphia bar, and Mr. John Norrls, cityetiitorot tho Philadelphia Record, are also acknowledged. In speaking of tho tax laws tho At torney General says: Just and truthful complaint is made against the laws imposing taxos on tbe pooplo of tho Commonwealth. A casual porusal of thetax laws will sufficiently indicato tho truth of tho first com plaint. Let tho skeptic grnpplo with tlio reventio bill of 1879, which bailies lawyers, Courts and officials, and, it unconvinced, then endeavor to asccr. lain exactly what property Is separate ly taxable for Stole, County and School purposes. That taxes aro grossly unequal has been a standing complaint for a gen oration. As, for instanco, tho land ol ihe State owned by individuals is ex empt from taxation for Slate purposes, together with tho product or profit tuereoi, whether coal, oil, iron, timber, or luriu produce. II owned by an as sorinlion of individuals, combining their capital lo promote an enterprise too great lor a Binglo banded ondcavor, tne money that buys tbo land, viz the capital, must, first, pny a bonus lux lor a charter. Secondly, a tax on capital stock, measured by tho amount of dividend paid, if equal to six per cent,, ana, 11 less, tnen by tho actual value of Iho stock at a given timo in the year. Third, if coal land, until lately, to a lax of three cents per ton on coal mined, though ovory ton rep rosents a portion of tho capital stock already twice taxed. Fourth, tho land itself, with all tho buildings, machinery, improvements, bought and paid for by the thrice taxed capital, is again liable to tho onerous and excessive demands of local authorities for County, School iioaii, ana special lax. The unjoining tract, equally valuable, equally pro ductive, owned by an individual, es capes with the payment of tho local lux only, or' one of the four paid by an association of citizens engaged in tho laudable and necessary enterprise of uuvoioping the resources ol tho Stato. the owner ol personal property, In a majority of cases, escapes assessment entirely, or, 11 his personal property be assessed, it is at ono fourth its actual valuo. Tho owner of money at Inter est, if he makes an honest return, or if returned by the Assessor, pays on tho entire valuo thereof. Thoownerof a mortgagod farm pays taxes thereon equally with his unin cumbered noighbor, and, in addition, the tax on mortgages, or if not so stipu lated in tho bond, then the mortgagee pays for him ond adds to the rate per cent. These instances will suffice to Indi cato, in some degree, tho inequality and injustice of these laws. As to their administration, the As sessors are required to make oath to return the real and personal property! at its actnnl value in cash. They do- libcratoly and oponly return tbo pro porty at one-third or one fourth its cash valuo. Mortgages and money at interest aro neither returnod by tbe owner or Assessor or by a sort of tacit general understanding, and all, except a small fraction, escape taxation alto gather. Such evasions of the law are tho rule and not the exception. As sessors who al tempted to perform their plain sworn duty would be visited with stormy indignation. Because the laws are felt to bo grossly inequitable, un equal and unjust, the people agree to gether to disregard and disobey thorn. G roat diversity of practice exists in the different counties as to the enforce ment of the tax laws, and wide differ New once of opinion as to thoir proper in terpretation. Persistent fllfort on tbe part of tbe Auditor General to secure uniformity has not been rewarded with success. With such a heterogenous mass ot ill assorted, mis-matcbod patches, tbero ia cause for wondor that county officials aro onabled to perform their duty at all. In many States manufacturing and mining enterprises arc fostered und en couraged by liberal exemptions Irom taxation for long terms of years. In others no tax isdomanded unless profits are made out of the business. In Pennsylvania, though such undertak ings are the very life-blood of her pros perity, tho forbidding band of local and State taxation unites all corporate enterprise with lour told vigor, and drives capital away from our door, and beyond our borders to enrich the stranger and beautify the stranger's luna. Micb legislation is absurdly un wise and supremely unjust. The remedy is plum. It may bo lounu in two words uniformity, equal ity. Clear away tho whole cumber some, unwieldy, expensivo, and in efficient system of Collectors and Mer cantile oppraieers, tho latter costing tbe Stato, in various forms, upwards of gn o,ouu annually. Make every citi zen his own Assessor and Appraiser. Let him, under oath and penalty, an nually return, through tbe Township Aasossor, to tbe County Treasurer, an ostimato and valuation of his real estate, deducting incumbrances, and of bis personal oslato, including every as set of whatsoever nuture, stocks, bonds, monoys at interest, debt duo bun. de ducting only just debts owing, not Hens on land, and also return tbe busi ness in which engaged, with an esti mate of its extonu Make it misde meanor to refuse or neglect to mako such roturn or to mako a talso return. Itenuiranoinquisitorial ordisagroeablo detail ; but a gonoral cstimatoof value. Men do not, us a rulo, under estimate thcirown possessions. Very low would chance the pains and penalities ol per jury to save a lew dollars of taxes. 1ot the authorities levy taxes annually, at a staled time, inform the Treasurer of their needs. Let him prepare his duplicate, attend in every district on a stated day and place to receive all the tax, abating for prompt pay ment, adding for delay. Give him the power of a Collector, and charge hi 111 with the whole. Givo tho County Court power to exonerate uncollocta blo tax. Let the Stato Treasurer bo furnished with tbe aggregate of each county's valuation, and assess tbe nec essary Slate tax accordingly directly upon each county, according ty its valuation. Give tbe counties ll taxes. licenses, rates and assessments of w hat soever nature, and apportion the State tax as well upon tne numborot licenses, mescantlle and other occupations, as upon the value ot tho property in each county, iiiva tho SUito Hoard ot l(o vision power to levy a largor rate on countiun in which thoy aro satisfied a just return is not mado, to the extent ol equalizing taxation. Tbe principle to be enfurcod is equal ity and unilormity. There can be no logical or just reason for taxing asso ciated capital engaged in mining or manufacturing, at a higher rata than individual capital, while many reasons may Do urged against it. the onlyaddi tional burden to be laid upon such capital should be an anmal tax for tbo privilege ui uAuuipuuu irom iuuiviuuui liability. All other taxos should be imposed on the proporty itself, whether real or personal, owned by the corpor ation, ana at the same rate as though owned by individuals. It is boliered that somo scheme calculated to bring to light all tho property in the State liable lo taxation, and to adjust the burden equally npon it, would not only disclose an immense quantity of proporty that now escapos altogether, but would reconcile tho peoplo to prompt and cheerful payment when each becomes satisfied that bo could bo called upon for no mora than his just share. that a vory considerable proportion of taxable personal properly escapes Male taxation under tbe present system, a glnnco at the last rcwrt 01 tno Auauor General win demon strate. Under existing laws a man in mod erate circumslaucos whose properly is all insight, consisting ot his bouse and lot, farm or occupation, pays a full rate on his assessment, white the moro fortunate neighbor who bas gamed bonds, stocks, mortgages and money at intorost, escapes with a tur loss pro portionate taxation, in trulb our taxes aro mainly paid by tbe corpora tions and tbe poor. Every consideration of justice and sound policy demands thorough reviow and reform in the tax laws of the Siato. The method I suggest may not bo tho best. It is at least not open to tho oboction ot novelty since it is in stioeesslul operation in sevoral places elsewhere. Tbo result and not tbe method is, however, the main oonsid oration. Our Commonwealth is, 1 bo liovo, great and prosperous and honest enough to bo lust. llr.sRY W, Palmer, Attorney General, An Anecdote or Jennt Lind In looking over an old pilo of papers we find the following anecdoto about ono of the purest and best women who ever trod thestago. "Sweotor. clearer and more heavenly than her own most entrancing strains are the kind pulsa tions of Miss Lind's heart when its chords vibrate to the touch of the beautiful and tbo holy. Tho follow ing is among the most recent of bor kindly offices. Ihe waiting-maid who had charge of the rooms she occupied at the Clifton II on so, Niagara Falls, attracted ber notice by bor beauty, at tention and fidelity. It so happened lhat this young woman, by name Mar garet Atkinson, was about to be mar ried, and the news reached tho good vocalist's ears. -Sbo immediately pur chased for hor a becoming and beauti ful bridal out til, car-rings, gloves, bon net, etc., and with her own hands at tended lo bor toilet on tho morning of 1110 ceremony, ibis uono, sbo look ber in her own carriage, having first read to her and hor future husband the beautiful and affecting passages applicable to the oocasion, conveyed her to Lewistown, entered the Episco pal church, and thore officiated as Margaret's brido'smaid. There Is no Queen in Europe that would not be proud ol such a maid of honor on a similar occasion." "Captain," said an Irishman, as the ship was hearing the coast In Inclem ent weather, "hev to an almcnik on board ?" "No, I havon't" "Then, be jabbers, we shall hare to take the woather as it comes." Grace "I am going to see Clara to day. Have yon any message 1 "Char lotte "I wonder how tod can visit that dreadful girl. Giro ber my love." TEEMS-$2 per tnnnm in Adranot, series-vol. 22, no. 7. EDUCATIONAL. BY M. L. McQUOWJt. L OCA L INSTITUTE HERJES. LUTHERSIIURO. As per announcement of programme, me urst institute ot Ibe series conven cd at Luthersbnrg on Friday. Febru ary Hb, and closed on Saturday night following. It was wall alUndad bv directors and parents, but should have boen better attended by teachers. Tho oauiviol-s weru very interesting ana instructive, and highly appreciated by the people. Hon. llenry ilouck gavo uduuuiiuub at. iuo uuiuronv sessions, ana impressed bis tiearors very favora bly. On F'riday evening he lectured on "Child Culture," being listened to uy a large ana appreciative audience. On Saturday evening the church, where the Instituto was hold, was fill od to overflowing. Prof. P. 8. Webor, Secretary ot Sandy township School Bourd, delivered bis popular and en tertaining lecture on "Montul Science." Luptain L. IS. Carlislo delivered a vorv able and touching valodictory address at the close of the session. The ses sions wore attended bv thirty rh-n teachers and fifteen directors. CURWENSVILLB. Twenty four teuchenaud ton direct. ors assembled at CurwonBvillo, on tbo day following tbe Luthersburg an- imuuiiiviik a vory excellent pro gramme bad been issued and the teachors did some excellent wnrbr Tbe Presbyterian choir furnished somo good music for the occasion. Supt Honck lectured In the after noon aud evening, and delimited hia audience by his practical and impress ive talks. Tho evening session was held in Arnold's Hall, and was ot suffi cient irtWcst to attract a large audi ence. ' lumber my. Tho Institute for this pluce hold on Monday, February 7, in point of interest and attendance, eclipsed any Institute held in the place. Tho peo plo turned out by scores, and tho whole community was astir with edu cational enthusiasm. Thirty toachcrs and directors wero in attendance, and the peoplo took an unusual interest in the procoodings. Prof. Trogo, ol the I'onnville schools, and Hon. Henry Uouck lectured at the day and even ing sessions lo delighted andionces. The Committee on Ilesoliitions sub milled the following: KlrrJ, That we tender our thanki tf. the peopl, of Lumber City for their attendance, and Ihe totereat maoifeeted during tbe institute. Aeeoiee... 1 bat wa tender our lhaoka tu tha oholr for the eioellonl muno raad.rej during thia ee.aioa of Inititate. ff,.W, That thoaa tearhera ho abeanted inemaoiTes Irom tbe ae.aiaai of Itiie ln.l itate have luat a rare ednoatiunal treat. Aeeuleed, Tbat oor thaaki are daa to our able and efficient tioportotendent, f.r holding thea. euuoaxunai mornings aaa Bsoartng th. ssrvioMof tbe Hob. Henry Uouck, a moat pleasant and In telligent Instructor. Tho proceedings of the othor meet ings will be gtvcu next waok. Mr. A. L. Erhard bos been chosen to fill the unexpired torm of Now Mill port school. The Local Institute fixed for Janes ville, was abandoned on account o! sickness in that village. A Teachers' Institute will be held at Chestnut Grove school house, in Bloom township, on Saturday, i'ebruary 26. Efforts are being put forth to mako the mooting a success, therefore, teachers would do woll to attend. The County Superintendent and others trom a dis tance will be prnsenl to aid in the worn. A JUST CRITICISM. Tho Washington Pest publishes a vigorous editorial on "Certain Demo cratic Blunders," and handles tbe Dem ocratic Congressional independents and absentees without gloves. Bv inde pendents it rolors to Stephens, Spoor and Folton, of Georgia. Tbe V'ojf says: in almost all the party oonlcsts ol the House a low members ot the ma jority parly have played into the hands 1 of tho opposition. They have been proud of the commendation of their opponents, who have used them and despised them for being thus used, they have mouthed mouldy platitudes about their "obligations to their own senso of duty rather than the dictates oi a caucus." bon they have flan ped their rhetorical wings and "soared ahovo party," thoir silly souls have ocon aeiigutca with tbo incest ct Bo publican praise. This is tho record ot men who wore elected bv Democrats oloctod as Democrats men who had begged Democratic voles from county to county, and who have prated lomr ana iouu oi inoirzenl lor the success of Democratic principles. Al the first possible epporlunity they betrayed iiioir constituents, betrayed thoir unn ciples, betrayed their party, and gavo easy victory to the enemy an enemy tbat cajoles and flatters such creatures while cherishing a robust contempt for thera and their ways. Democratic absenteeism has boon another and a very f ruitful source of Democratic dis comfiture. The ullegod Democratic majority has been an actual minority for weeks in succession. Victory bos been given lo the ICopublicans by a few Democrats who have cared moro for porsonal convenience than for pub- no uuiy or mo miorests ot their party Scores of times a quorum has been broken and the passage of a Demo cratio measure detested by tho absence o! a tew men who, at that moment, could be lonnd In a bar-room 1 A party is in a sad predicament wnen its success or aeleat depends oo throe or four of halt a-dozen men w hose appotlte Tor stimulants will not give way to any higher sense. And to this oomplexion has it coma with the Dem ocratic party in tho Houso on more than one occasion of tho greatest im portance. Such men are until for any public position. They are a disgrace tn their constituents, a reproach to the House, an affliction lo tbo country. A man who will risk the success of bis party in a crisis, rather than wait for a drink, is just about as contomptible the holy leiiow wbo "rises above party" in order to he patted on the back ny ine iicpumican press, it the minority in the AL II. shall show itself compact, sagacious, and guard edly aggressive as has tho minority in the present congress, tbore will bo a change two years hence. It is not the strength of Republican principles hall so much as the weakness of Democratic management that has transferred the sceptre this time. Meantimsafow Dem ocratic districts will do well to drop in to obscurity the men whose egotism, weakness, neglect, and appetites have enabled a minority of Republicans prac tically to dominate a Democratic House and finally retire the Democracy to the minority side. What holds all thesnuflin the world ? No one nose. WHAT SHOULD I DO 7 U I ware tcld that I aauatdll t.-morruw, That tbB neat ana Which alnka should basr ate pait all faar aad Burrow Fur any on., All tbo Ighi fought, all tba abort Jeura.y tbrourhi What aloald I dot I do aot think thai I ahoald shrink or falter, Bui Juat go oa Doing SBy work, aor ehange, aer eeek t alter Aughl that Ib g'.aei But ria, aad mora, and Iot,, and Bulla, aad pray Foroaa mure day, And lying down at light far a laat aloeplng, . . . l ' Waiob hearkena ever: "Lord, within Thy keep ing How anoutd I f..,f Aad whea to-morrow brlae, Thea nearer .till, Do Tboo Tby will." IVASIIINUTOX CITY. It has not grown as other A nieiiean cities grow ; ils progress has been tar dy. This yeanling of towns, so rare fully fostered on the hunks of the l'o tomuc, bus not availed itself to any great extentof that popular method of improvement so successfully adopted by Chicugo and Boston the method of burning; and its increase has boon more a reflection of tho extending mag nitude of other oentros than a sponta neous movement. .Mora and more tbe custom bas grown among tho rich or energetic and inquiring inhabitants of other places, of going to the Capital to , see what it is liko; many ot tbcin bare boensofascinatod that tbey have staid; and now Washington may fairly be called the Winter end of Now York, as Newport is tho Summer extension of tho metropolis. Add to the exotic population Iho enlarged ranks of pub lic officials and clerks, the growing circlo of scientific and literary people, wno irom cuoico or government con nection havo been led ta make thoir homos there, together wilh tho needful contingent of small traders who supply tbo daily wants ot those elomcnut, and you have a gouoral classification of tho hundred and sixty thousand heads counted by tho new census. A city without a commerce and without sub urbsdrive a mile or two in any di. rectioD uud you find yourself in tho midst ot woods sot but sparsely with bouses, or cabins, and with only tbe great pillared dome, liko a shining cloud in the air, to remind you of the human massWo near Washington nev ertheless wears distinctly tho appear ance of a cupitul which has risen to tho emergency. It has this special charm to commend it above other places, that while Bob tou and Sun Francisco, Cincinnati and New York, despito thoir numerous points of other than cominorcial inter est, are work a day towns, the "mai den capital" shows a gay or disposition, and devotes itself largely to social pleasures. To tho outsider tho defter ence is that between friendship ami flirtation. You like, you may love, the particular big locul capital whore you live and do business, but you ap- proacn vt asuington.with a sense of IU: being a something piquant and novel, with which you may triffo and entan gle yourself in in a make-believe at tachment having all tho stimulus and none of the drawbacks of steady devo tion. Besides, it is a city provided wilh "sighUi." There are Congress and the Capital; there are Mount Ver non and Kaloruma, whore dwelt the author of tho "Columbiad," iu pro found conviction of his errand as tho American epio poet; and Cabin-John Bridge, the longest single arch in the world ; Arlington, with its earlier his toric and later war memories ; George town, with its observatory, its college, and its convent; besides all these, the Corcoran Art Gullory, the Smithsonian Institution, the curiosities of tho Pat ent Office, the Treasury with its hun dreds of rooms and thousands of em ployes, whore you poer into the busy brain-cells of the Government while they are in full activity. Yon arrive by an early morning train, and aro greeted by a gong beat ing for breakfast at tho station, which makes yon teel like an impossible Chl neso embassy. But, armed with a pocket copy of the Constitution, you re-assert your birthright, and after going to tho hotel, where you wait some bours for a room, you step forth into the broad airy street. Thoy have a continental width and extent, making it impossible to crowd them except on rare occasions; and in the more retired ones children glide peace fully along tbo asphalt on roller-skates. Walking these thoroughfares.you know tbat tbe trial of tho Boms is over thorn all, but it is a picturesque trail, excel lent in its results, whatever it may have been morally. Many of the houses in the new northwest end are woll sol oil by trees and lawns ; some stand on terraces decked with vines and shrubbery ; and the avenues arc lined with moro than a hundred thou sand trees judiciously planted elm and tulip, buttonwood and oottonwood, Ihe ash, tbo negundo, the maple, The quality of the houses is still unequal, Here and there you see a relic of the villago era some little whitewashed hut slicking pertinnciously to the side of a fine modern brick structure ot oomlorluhlo and tasteful stylo, like a wasp's nest attached to a real human habitation; and it is amusing to corns upon a building in what is known, according to tho barbarons nomencla ture of the place, as E street which bears on one side the legend, "Law College of the I'niversily of George town," and on Iho othoi, "Capitol Laundry." Such a conjunction is only to be explained by tbe tendency of people nowadays to wash their dirty linen in oourt. Colored men and women are numerous, and laugh very loud on the st roots with refreshing freedom. There is everywhere about tho city a slight but racy touch of tho Southern characteristics, interfnsod with the vigor of other portions of the I'nion ; and for the sake of this you are willing to iorgive the copious to baccostams those blotson tho national escutcheon which disfigure the side walks, and aronnd which you see an English tourist and bis wife making their way with a pardonably imperial disdain. George P. Lalhrop, in Har per's Magazine fur March. A country girl at a fashionable hotel in New York noticed that all the guests used their forks only in eating their pie. I'pon her return home sbo re ported the tact to the old lady, who comforted her by observing, " You shouldn't mind 'em, Jemima; it's all because they're too lazy to nse their knivos." A dull old ludy, being told that a certain lawyer was lying at tbo point of death, exclaimed: "Mr gracious I won't even doath stop that man's lying?" Tbo moat aftlictod part of tbe houso is the window. It is always full ot panes, and who bas not seen moro than one window-blind T The Chinese professor at Harvard has gained one over the number oi his pupils lost year. This year the class conlsins two. Don't swear wben you step on tbe icy sidewslk. Think of a little prayer instead "Now 1 lame mo" for in stance. It was a Vassar girl just gradnalod bo inquired : "la the crack of a rifle the place where they put the powder in r Thore is not a Smith in the United States Sonato, and yet that body is supposed to represent tbe people. A pretty girl may talk slang, but she never says to her bean, "None of yonriipi"